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...Radcliffe graduate students have obtained a Picasso and a Mondrian original for use in their exhibition at the Fogg Art Museum. Sponsoring the display are Sally Schaefer 2G, and Lilian Cramer 2G, students in the Fine Arts Department...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Annex Art Students Sponsor Exhibition | 3/20/1952 | See Source »

...Cramer is back in Cambridge, as Lester S. Cramer IL. The Law School Admissions Board, he said, accepted him with "full knowledge of my background...

Author: By Ronald P. Kriss, | Title: Exiled Tutoring Schools Once Fought College For Control of Educating Students, but Lost | 2/4/1952 | See Source »

...CRIMSON editor, in response to this letter, began to take tutoring under Cramer along with hundreds of other Harvard students. His cancelled check was sufficient proof, and on January 15, 1948, the CRIMSON announced: "After taking an 8-year knockout count, Harvard's biggest bugaboo in recent years, the professional tutoring school, has begun its climb from the canvas...

Author: By Ronald P. Kriss, | Title: Exiled Tutoring Schools Once Fought College For Control of Educating Students, but Lost | 2/4/1952 | See Source »

Dean Bender responded to the article by branding the cram parlor as "a menace to decent education," and Cramer stopped his activities as an "instructor" for the second time...

Author: By Ronald P. Kriss, | Title: Exiled Tutoring Schools Once Fought College For Control of Educating Students, but Lost | 2/4/1952 | See Source »

...Time Magazine noted in 1936 that, "Although tutoring bureaus appear . . . on most sizable U.S. campuses, they are actually characteristic only of Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, where studentsM-6LESTER CRAMER '30, now a first-year law student at Harvard, once head man of a noted tutoring school, attempted a post-war revival...

Author: By Ronald P. Kriss, | Title: Exiled Tutoring Schools Once Fought College For Control of Educating Students, but Lost | 2/4/1952 | See Source »

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